1 / 13

Summary

Collimator Materials for LHC Luminosity Upgrade: Status of Irradiation Studies at BNL Collimation Upgrade Specification Meeting 21/06/2013 N. Mariani (CERN EN/MME/PE). Summary. Radiation Hardness Studies at KI and BNL Goals of Irradiation at BNL Equipment Specimen Types & Identification

rufus
Télécharger la présentation

Summary

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Collimator Materials for LHC Luminosity Upgrade:Status of Irradiation Studies at BNLCollimation Upgrade Specification Meeting21/06/2013N. Mariani (CERN EN/MME/PE)

  2. Summary • Radiation Hardness Studies at KI and BNL • Goals of Irradiation at BNL • Equipment • Specimen Types & Identification • Summary of Tests • Vacuum Capsules Accident • Summary of Actions • Conclusions Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  3. Radiation Hardness Studies • Radiation Hardness is a key requirement. • Benefit from complementary studies in two research centers with different irradiation parameters, different materials and approaches • Results Benchmarking • Ongoing Characterization Program in RRC- Kurchatov Institute (Moscow) to assess the radiation damage on: • CuCD • MoCuCD • SiC • Features: • Irradiation with protons and carbon ions at 35 MeV and 80 MeV respectively • Direct water cooling and T~100°C • Thermo-physical and mechanical characterization at different fluencies (1016, 1017, 1018 p/cm2) • Theoretical studies of damage formation • Proposal for Characterization Program in Brookhaven National Laboratory (New York) to assess the radiation damage on: • Molybdenum • Glidcop • CuCD • MoGRCF • Features: • Irradiation with proton beam at 200 MeV • Indirect water cooling and T~100°C (samples encapsulated with inert gas) • Thermo-physical and mechanical characterization for fluence up to 1020 p/cm2 • Possibility to irradiate with neutrons (simulate shower on secondary coll.) Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  4. Goals of Irradiation in BNL • Assess degradation of physical and mechanical properties of selected materials (Molybdenum, Glidcop, CuCD, MoGRCF) as a function of dpa (up to 1.0). • Key physical and mechanical properties to be monitored : • Stress Strain behavior up to failure (Tensile Tests on metals, Flexural Tests on composites) • Thermal Conductivity • Thermal Expansion Coefficient (CTE) and swelling • Electrical Conductivity • Possible damage recovery after thermal annealing • Compare dpa level to expected dpa level in LHC at nominal/ultimate operating conditions • Is dpa a sufficient indicator to compare different irradiation environments? Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  5. Equipment Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  6. Specimen Types Several Materials shapes exist for Metals and Composites Different Sample manufacturing methods and tests techniques Metallic materials samples: Molybdenum + Glidcop Tensile tests Other Composite materials samples: CuCD + MoGRCF 4.00+/-0.05 Parallelepiped shape for all tests Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  7. Samples Identification For each material capsule the samples will be identified as followingonce the capsules are opened (top and bottom are arbitrary since the radiation profile is axial symmetric) Mo: 2 capsules Glidcop: 1 capsule MoGR: 1 capsules CuCD: 1 capsules example: Mo1-P2 = Mo capsule 1 (higher Energy), 2nd physical sample Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  8. Summary of Tests • Notes: • Not all MoGR and CuCD reference samples ready yet; • Irradiation Levels to be extensively defined for each sample in terms of dpaby Fluka Experts: • L. Lari BE/ABP/LCU, • M. Brugger EN/STI/EET. Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  9. Materials Specimens Holding Box • The specimens are encapsulated into special vacuum tight capsules (vacuum or inert gas), the different capsules being mounted into a Holding Box. • The cooling is made by water flow between adjacent capsules • Insufficient cooling between CuCD and MoGR capsules provoked the expansion of CuCD1 capsule, that damaged both CuCD1 and MoGR1 capsules (with isotopes contamination); • Emergency stop and layout modifications to allow better cooling. •  Final layout: • 1 Holding Box • 5 capsules x Holding Box Picture and status report by N. Simos (BNL) Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  10. Summary of Actions I BNL – Complete SRIM energy deposition calculations and MCNPX isotope production calculations - DONE BNL – Complete Thermo-mechanical analysis of whole holding box - DONE CERN – perform FLUKA energy deposition calculations - DONE BNL – Present the calculations to the safety committee - DONE BNL – CERN: validate the proposed samples geometry and number - DONE CERN – Composite materials production in RHP Technology and in BrevettiBizz + samples preparation at CERN. - DONE CERN – Machine metallic samples at CERN Atelier. – DONE BNL – Weld the vacuum capsules and mount them in holding box – DONE BNL – Insert the holding box in BLIP Facility – DONE Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  11. Summary of Actions II • CERN – Prepare specification document for tests. – DONE • CERN – Produce Flexural tests fixture for composite materials. – DONE • CERN – Produce reference samples for characterization before irradiation – Ongoing (not all CuCD and MoGR produced now) • CERN – provide the expected dpa level and absorbed dose for each sample – Ongoing • CERN - Provide Materials Certificates – Ongoing (only Molybdenum available!) • BNL – Start Irradiation at BLIP – Started • Insufficient cooling damaged CuCD1 and MoGR1 capsules • Irradiation restarted after layout modifications and damaged capsules removal Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  12. Conclusions Beam-induced material damages (both due to instantaneous high intensity impacts and long-term irradiation) are one of the most serious threats to High-energy, High-intensity accelerators, as stated by RRC-KI and BNL Irradiation Studies on Phase I Materials. A first irradiation campaign is already ongoing at KI on selected novel advanced materials of interest for Phase II Collimators. A new irradiation campaign at BNL just started to complement the material characterization from the radiation hardness point of view for future collimators design. The campaign suffered from technical issues, that have been promptly resolved by BNL in a very short time. Samples irradiation restarted at nominal proton current (105-110 µA), irradiation phase end foreseen in 9-10 weeks. To be discussed with BNL if it will be possible to check the contaminated samples and to re-use them for further testing. Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

  13. Thanks for Your Attention Acknowledgements: N. Simos BNL A. Bertarelli, S. Redaelli, L. Lari, M. Brugger, CERN Nicola Mariani – EN-MME

More Related